“thank you, Peggy Cooper Cafritz.” You truly paved the way for all of us.
Peggy Cooper Cafritz, a doyenne of Washington arts and education, who tried to mend many of the city’s social and racial wounds, created one of the nation’s leading arts-intensive high schools, and capped her civic involvement with a divisive six-year tenure as D.C. school board president, died Feb. 18 at a hospital in Washington. She was 70.
She also co-created a pilot workshop in creative arts in summer 1968 that she fostered into the Duke Ellington School of the Arts.
MAY GOD BLESS YOUR FAMILY AND FRIENDS.... and You Rest In Power!
#crossrhodesmanifesto #dc

What good is a trophy or statue if the models don't hold no values?
THE PRIVILEGED OPPRESSED TO GOOD FOR PRACTICAL THINGS.
BLACK LIVES MATTER MORE THAN ACTUAL THINGS.
#CROSSRHODES368 #crossrhodesmanifesto
#wesfelton#raheemdevaughn